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Sunday

Houston Criminal Attorney Jim Sullivan defends people
accused of violating their misdemeanor or felony probation in Harris and
surrounding counties. Since 1994, Jim Sullivan has kept hundreds of people on regular and deferred adjudication probation.

On most misdemeanor cases, if a person successfully completes their
deferred adjudication probation, then they can seek to get their
criminal record sealed (non-disclosed) to the public. For felony cases
that qualify, the person can do this 5 years after successfully
completing their deferred probation.

If the State has filed a Motion to Revoke your Probation or to Adjudicate your Guilt, you can call

defense Attorney Jim Sullivan at 281-546-6428 to discuss your case.

According to a recent article in the Houston Chronicle,
The Harris County Probation Department has recently come under fire for
serious problems in the handling of drug testing for people on
probation or on bond. According to evidence uncovered and brought to
light in a recent hearing, the integrity of drug testing in the
department may not be trusted due to clerical errors, faulty record
keeping, mislabeling of samples and a sloppy chain of custody. Because
of these serious problems, many people may have been arrested or had
their probation revoked based on false positives. A local defense
attorney alleges a systemic problem and calls for sweeping overhauls.

Witness: Error ruined his life

By Brian Rogers

A man who spent 10 days in jail last
year because of a clerical error in Harris County’s probation
department testified Friday that the mistake cost him his driver’s
license, his job and his home. “I’m devastated,” Richard Youst said on
the witness stand. “It devastated my life.” The 28-year-old said his
life fell apart after a false positive on a drug test in April 2011. He
had been on probation for driving while intoxicated. “I had to move back
in with my mother,” the 28-year-old said. “I sleep on an air mattress
on the floor.”

Youst’s story is one of several that [his] attorney…
said she uncovered while investigating the Harris County Community
Supervision and Corrections Department. “It’s hard to quantify all of
the hurt and the wrong that’s been done to him because of this simple
mistake that they refused to fix… His case did not have to happen. They
knew about these types of mistakes a year before.”

Evidence uncontested

[The attorney] is putting the
county’s probation department on trial in an unconventional hearing that
was supposed to be a routine probation revocation for one of her
clients. The evidence that Youst’s test was false was uncontested
Friday. [The] broader point is that clerical errors, faulty record
keeping and other problems may mean no urine tests done by the probation
department can be trusted. The division tests more than 25,000 urine
samples a month for suspects out on bail and others who are on
probation.

Some of the problems include mislabeling samples, data
entry problems and a lack of audits or oversights to catch mistakes. A
supervisor who testified Friday said finding 3-month-old urine samples
in the back of the division’s unlocked refrigerators was not uncommon.
The old samples would simply be sent out as though they had been
collected that day, said Donald Martin, a supervisor at the department.
As part of the court-mandated “chain of custody” that ensures the
integrity of evidence, law enforcement has to show that an appropriate
custodian has kept evidence from being tampered with before it can be
admitted in court. “When it comes to chain of custody,” Martin
testified, “there are more holes than Swiss cheese.”

False positives found

Deputy Director of Operations Kim
Ballentine declined to answer questions about the allegations because of
the ongoing hearing and the pending underlying criminal case… The
agency also released a statement saying there would be no comment Friday
on the situation. [The attorney] said she believes an untold number
of probationers and people who are awaiting trial may have been jailed
or sanctioned for false positives. “One source testified that there
are at least 32 cases that they recently discovered,” she said. “And
that’s just scratching the surface.” Besides keeping her client out
of jail, [the attorney] wants supervisors at the probation department
fired and the agency revamped. She also questioned how prosecutors
can now legally revoke probationers for positive tests. “You want to
know that there is integrity in the evidence… I don’t know how the
district attorney’s office can rely on any urinalysis from this
probation department.” The Harris County District Attorney’s Office
released a statement that it plans to review all of the allegations
after the hearing ends…